The brothers had only grinned and kept working. There was certainly work enough for four. They'd laid a fire; they'd cut wood and built a platform to hang half the carcass over it. The sunset afterlight was dwindling and the cooking meat smelled wonderful, and Renner was going to hurt tomorrow.
It was a matter of pride. You ate the meat when you killed a ghost, they'd told him. You opened cans when you'd failed.
"It feels like I've been diddled, and I don't know how or why," Renner told his pocket computer. No way of knowing if it was getting through. "There should be more to it. But we're going back to Zion tomorrow unless I see some way around it."
He closed the computer. He was ravenous. The meat would take another hour to cook through. Would it taste as good as dinner at the palace?
Less well seasoned, maybe, less well cooked, but fresher. And there was the "sauce": exhaustion and hunger. Four men would be hard put to make a dent in that much meat.
That much meat. He flipped the computer open. The ship would be halfway to the horizon, dammit. "The ghost was well fed. Why didn't it attack like the one we watched at the palace? I didn't blow a heart open. It lived too long. It acted... drugged. The Scott brothers didn't seem weary enough, either. If I'm not seeing mirages... there'd have to be a lot of men involved. This is big."
They collapsed the tent and loaded it with the fur and the snow buggies into the cargo compartment of the plane. The snow ghost meat was lashed to the struts holding the landing skids. Boynton climbed in and sat in the pilot's seat.
"Hey," Darwin Scott said.
"Oh, hell, I'll fly," Boynton said. "I didn't do anything else to earn my keep. Son of a bitch, I'd never have believed that big a ghost would be in here. Farther south, yeah, but not just here."
"Why didn't we land farther south?" Renner asked.
"Lakes are too big," Boynton said. "Lots of warm streams from the volcanoes. Most lakes don't even freeze, and they're all deep. You want to go down there, you land here and take a long trip on a snow buggy." He spat through the window. "Which I had intended to do. Son of a bitch."
James laughed. "Renner? I wanted to see how you moved before we got into real danger. I didn't expect any snow ghost, not there."
The Scott brothers climbed in. James took the right-hand seat next to Boynton.
"I'm a pilot," Renner said.
"Next time," James Scott said. "This is tricky, with the plane loaded down..."
"He's right," Boynton agreed. "You ever fly one of these things? Didn't think so. I'll check you out in Zion. Right now we ought to get that fur somewhere it'll be properly treated. That's a good fur."
Renner strapped in behind James Scott and waited until Boynton had the plane airborne. "Hey, Ajax, take us over the woods where I shot the ghost."
Boynton grinned. "Right. Want to have a look myself."
"We really ought to be getting in," Darwin Scott said.
"Hell, the man wants to see the place," James said. "Would myself. Good shooting, Mr. Renner."
"We'll just circle and go on," Darwin Scott said. "That's a good fur."
"It is that," Boynton agreed.
There had been light snow that night, but Renner could still make out their snow buggy tracks in places. The area where they had stopped was clearly marked, and so were some of their snowshoe tracks.
"Must have been a lot of wind through here," Boynton muttered.
Renner frowned. Boynton was right. There was very little snow caught in the trees here. In the woods near the lake where they'd landed, there had been a lot more. Here there was less in the trees, more on the ground. Mmm?
"Right down there," James Scott said. "Here, I'll take it a moment." The plane banked and turned in a tight spiral so that Renner could see down to the scene of his triumph.
Boynton was on the high side of the plane. He craned up and looked off to the left. "What the hell... ?"
"What?" Renner demanded. He craned past Boynton. "Tracks?"
South of the forest the snow looked chewed. Snowmobile tires, men's footprints, the blurred circle where a helicopter must have come down and taken off. A hell of a lot of activity. Renner said, "Okay, take us-"
Darwin Scott drove his elbow into Renner's stomach. Renner gasped, and a sickly sweet smell filled his lungs. He sat back with a sappy grin on his face. "Peace... Sam," he said.
"What the hell?" Boynton demanded.
"Gentile friend, you have seen nothing," Darwin Scott said.
"Gentile. Church business?"
"He is not a gentile," James Scott said. "Lapsed, but he was born to the Church."
"I must think on this," Darwin said.
A part of Renner's mind told him that Boynton was acting strangely, and so were the Scotts, but he didn't really care. When the plane banked slightly so that his head rolled, he saw that Darwin was holding a pistol. Renner giggled.
"Use the spray," James Scott said. "I have the controls."
"Hey, I don't want to be no giggling idiot," Boynton said. "Look, if this is Church business-hell, give me the skin and my share of the gear, and it's quits for me. I'll say we got a ghost, and the dude wanted to hunt some more, so we split up. You took the dude off to a place you didn't want me to know about. After that it's up to you."
"It would even be true," Darwin Scott said. "We must think on this."
"While you're thinking, where the hell are we going?" Boynton demanded.
"Outside Zion there is a small lake," Darwin Scott said. "Land on that."
5 The True Church
Come, come, ye Saints, no toil or labor fear; but with joy wend your way;
Though hard to you this journey may appear, Grace shall be as your day.
‘Tis far better for us to strive, Our useless cares from us to drive;
Do this, and joy your hearts will swell-All is well, all is well!
Hymns of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints
A tiny red light danced in Ruth Cohen's eyes, then the massive door opened before she could touch the bell. The butler was dressed in a traditional manner. Ruth hadn't seen anyone in that costume except in Government House and tri-vee shows. "Welcome, Commander. His Excellency has been expecting you."
Ruth glanced down at her best civilian dress and grinned wryly.
The butler took her overcoat and handed it to another servant. "His Excellency is in the library," he said, and ushered her down the hall.
Bury was in his travel chair, not at the desk but at an elaborately inlaid game table. "You will forgive me if I do not stand? Thank you. Would you care for a drink? We have an excellent Madeira. Not from Earth, I fear, but from Santiago, which many say is not greatly inferior."
"I would really prefer coffee."
Bury smiled. "Turkish or filtre? Filtre. Cynthia, the Kona, I believe. And my usual. Thank you." Bury indicated a chair.
"Please be seated, Commander. Thank you."
Ruth smiled. "Your hospitality is a bit overwhelming."
Bury's expression didn't change. "Thank you, but I am certain that a vice admiral's daughter has seen better. Now, what can I do for you?"
Ruth looked pointedly around the paneled room.
Bury grinned mirthlessly. "If anyone can listen to me without my knowledge and consent, some very expensive experts will regret it."
"I suppose. Your Excellency, Kevin-Sir Kevin invited me to dinner. Now I'm probably not the first girl he ever stood up, but there's a matter of his reports as well. And when I called here, no one seemed to know where he was." She shrugged. "So I came looking."
Bury's lips twitched. "And I presume you have left messages with the Imperial Marines in case you also vanish?"